15 'bonded labourers' rescued

[email protected] (CD Network)
October 17, 2011
Mangalore, October 17: As many as 15 helpless construction workers including a woman hailing from remote villages of West Bengal, who were forced to work as bonded labourers for over one and a half month under a contract company affiliated to Mangalore Refinery and Petrochemicals Limited at Porkodi near Bajpe on the outskirts of the city, were rescued in an early morning operation on Monday.

Acting on a credible information provided by Paschim Banga Khet Majoor Samiti, a trade union of agricultural workers from West Bengal, a team of officials led by Mangalore Tahsildar Ravichandra Naik and State assistant labour commissioner Venkatesh Sindihatti along with police personnel raided workers huts around 6:45 am, to witness a tragic scene.

Incapacitated by the widespread hunger, in Purulia and Bankura districts of West Bengal, the workers had been forced to migrate to Karnataka in search of work.

In the last week of August, Dibesh Das, a contractor in Purulia district had recruited a total of 15 workers from Layekdi and Lakhanpur villages in Purulia district and Katharia village in Bankura district.

However, Dibesh Das handed the workers over to Bholanath Singh, a labour contractor from Burdwan district, who in turn had sent them through his employee Sanjay Singh to work in Mangalore. The workers were engaged for construction work.

As contractor promised Rs 4,000 monthly wages apart from food, shelter and other necessary facilities for eight-hour work a day, the helpless 14 men and a woman thought they could return to their homes with a heavy purse after a few months of toil.

However after reaching their new work place, they were literally treated as bonded labourers and their family members too could not contact them for a long time.

It is said that when the family members asked the contractor for the whereabouts of the workers, they were instead threatened.

“Quite against to their promise, we were forced to work 14 - 16 hours a day with hardly any payment of wages so far. Since past one and a half month, we were taken out from our huts at 7 am in the morning for work and were only allowed back at 9 pm”, said Muchiram Kaibartha, one of the workers.

“When I protested against the ill treatment a few days ago, the contractor thrashed me”, he said showing the wound on his leg.

“We were not allowed to go out of the workplace as the contractor always kept an eye on us. And whenever we raised our problems before the employers they respond with physical violence and abusive language” said Biplav Gode, another labourer.

“When we pleaded the contractor for monthly wages, he replied that he had bought us all for Rs 4 lakh from another contractor, who is now absconding”, he said, adding that so far the workers were able to get a payment of Rs 70 for a week.

Bhim Goswamy, another worker alleged that the musclemen beat the workers, when they put up a protest against the continuous exploitation. “We just want to go out of this hell. We had come here with a dream earning. But, we became bonded labourers. My wife Urmila has fallen sick, but, I don't have money to take her to the doctor”, he lamented.

He said that the employers had failed to provide minimum treatment for Urmila, the only woman among the 15 workers, who has been suffering stomach pain and neck pain since several days.

“I cannot see things after 5 pm due to vision problem. However, I was forced to take cement mix to the upper floors by steps till night” complained an ailing Sanjay Kaibarta.

Not bonded labourers!

Speaking to media persons Tahsildar Ravichandra Naik said, although it was confirmed that 15 labourers were forced to work for no wages by one Sanjay Singh, they cannot be called as bonded labourers.

“There was no sign of human rights violation. Even during the medical examination, doctors could not found any mark of physical torture on the labourers”, he said.

However, Mr Sindihatti admitted that the 'violation of labour law' was apparent in this case. “If they want to return home after securing the pending wages, we will make proper arrangements for their travel” he said.

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News Network
January 25,2020

New Delhi, Jan 25: The latest edition of the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary features 26 new Indian English words, including Aadhaar, chawl, dabba, hartal and shaadi.

The 10th edition of the dictionary, which was launched on Friday, has 384 Indian English words and incorporates over 1,000 new words such as chatbot, fake news and microplastic.

The dictionary focuses on language change and its evolution through the years, and has ensured that the language and examples used in the new edition are relevant and up to date with the times, Oxford University Press (OUP) said.

The new edition comes with interactive online support through the Oxford Learner's Dictionaries website and an app. The website includes advanced features such as audio-video tutorials, video walkthroughs, self-study activities and enhanced iWriter and iSpeaker tools.

"This edition has 26 new Indian English words of which 22 figure in the printed dictionary. The other four are in the digital version," said Fathima Dada, Managing Director (Education Division) at OUP.

Some of other new Indian words in the dictionary are auntie (while aunty already figures in the English dictionary, auntie is an Indianism), bus stand, deemed university, FIR, non-veg, redressal, tempo, tube light, veg and videograph.

The four new Indian English words in the online version of the dictionary are current (for electricity), looter, looting and upazila (one of the areas that a district is divided into for administration purposes).

According to OUP, the new edition provides better, more accurate and understandable definitions with examples, usage notes and additional resources to help the learner use the right word in the right context.

"Prevalence and common usage are the main criteria for enlisting new words. We scan the globe for words which are often used by people while speaking English. Then these words go through a rigorous testing process," Dada said.

"As OUP is the custodian of English language globally, these words have to go through its processes," she told PTI.

The Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary, she said, has been reinventing itself for nearly eight decades, anticipating the growing learning requirements of learners.

"The 10th edition also is equipped with a strong digital support system, including an app," she said.

It is equipped with several digital tools. With iSpeaker, learners can get help preparing for speaking exams and presentations. With iWriter, learners can plan, write and review their written work. Text Checker allows the teacher to check any text against the Oxford 3000, 5000, and OPAL (Oxford Phrasal Academic Lexicon) written word list.

Resources accessible through online premium access include lesson plans, worksheets, video walkthroughs, and classroom and self-study activities. With the OALD app one can find 86,000 words, 95,000 phrases, 112,000 meanings and 237,000 examples.

The dictionary, which spans 77 years, was originally published in Japan in 1942 and was first brought out by OUP in 1948. The learner's dictionary is based on the original values of its creator, Albert Sydney Hornby, whose aim was to help language learners worldwide understand the meaning of English words.

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News Network
March 29,2020

Mangaluru, Mar 29: Dakshina Kannada Co-operative Milk Producers’ Union Limited in a statement announced that their milk collection centres across Dakshina Kannada and Udupi districts will be closed on March 29 and 30.

Due to a shortage of storage space with them, the Union has decided to stop collecting milk on these two days, according to the statement issued here on Saturday.

The sale/retail of milk and milk products won’t be affected in these two days.

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News Network
February 25,2020

Belagavi, Feb 25: Left Parties will launch countrywide door-to-door campaign from March 1 to 23 against Citizenship (Amendment) Act (CAA), National Population Register (NPR), National Register of Citizens (NRC), Communist Party of India (M) General Secretary Sitaram Yechury said on Tuesday.

Addressing a press conference here, he said that CPI (M) and other Left parties were participating in the awareness programme that will conclude on March 23, on the martyrdom day of Bhagat Singh, Chandrashekar and Rajguru.

"Till now 13 states have expressed their opposition for NRC and will not implement it, which means more than fifty per cent of country will not have it," he added.

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